mercredi 14 mars 2012

25 best-paying jobs for women

Click on the ads to disappear













In the last 30 years, the wage gap between men and women has narrowed considerably. In 1979, the year the Bureau of Labor Statistics began tracking salary information by gender, women earned just 62 percent of what men did. Earlier this year, the BLS reported that, in the fourth quarter of 2011, that figure had risen nearly 20 percent. Women now earn an average of 81.6 cents for every dollar men do.
But in a time when women make up close to half of the workforce and are graduating college at a higher rate than men, why is there still a nearly 20 percent difference in earnings?

There are a number of reasons why the pay gap persists -- women are more likely to work part time and less likely to negotiate their salaries, for example.

Perhaps the biggest factor? Women make up a smaller percentage of the workforce in high-paying careers like engineering, computer science and finance than men. According to the BLS, for example, "In 2008, only 9 percent of female professionals were employed in the high-paying computer and engineering fields, compared with 45 percent of male professionals." Additional research from Bloomberg BusinessWeek found that, among business school graduates, men were more likely to pursue high-paying fields like finance and consulting, while women were more likely to choose lower-paying careers in human resources and marketing.

"Women often pursue careers like social work, publishing, non-profit and education where the pay is historically lower than in fields like finance and engineering," says Roy Cohen, author of "The Wall Street Professional's Survival Guide." "Even in medicine, more men will become surgeons, whereas female physicians tend to pursue dermatology or internal medicine, which also tend to offer lower compensation."

That's not a bad thing -- research has shown that women are more likely to choose work they find interesting and fulfilling over work that is lucrative. From a purely financial standpoint, we wondered what careers would narrow the wage gap if more women pursued them. According to the BLS, these 25 jobs are the ones that give women the most earning potential.

1. Pharmacists        
Median weekly earnings: $1,898*

2. Lawyers              
Median weekly earnings: $1,631

3. Computer and information systems managers
Median weekly earnings: $1,543

4. Physicians and surgeons
Median weekly earnings: $1,527

5. Chief executives             
Median weekly earnings: $1,464

6. Nurse practitioners       
Median weekly earnings: $1,432

7. Software developers    
Median weekly earnings: $1,388

8. Operations research analysts    
Median weekly earnings: $1,326

9. Human resources managers      
Median weekly earnings: $1,273

10. Psychologists   
Median weekly earnings: $1,244

11. Computer programmers
Median weekly earnings: $1,238

12. Physical therapists         
Median weekly earnings: $1,216

13. Occupational therapists              
Median weekly earnings: $1,193

14. Management analysts  
Median weekly earnings: $1,174

15. Physical scientists
Median weekly earnings: $1,167

16. Medical and health services managers
Median weekly earnings: $1,166

17. Computer systems analysts       
Median weekly earnings: $1,144

18. Architecture and engineering    
Median weekly earnings: $1,140

19. Marketing and sales managers 
Median weekly earnings: $1,127

20. Medical scientists          
Median weekly earnings: $1,127

21. Postsecondary teachers and professors               
Median weekly earnings: $1,093

22. Speech-language pathologists 
Median weekly earnings: $1,076

23. Education administrators            
Median weekly earnings: $1,061

24. Managers, all other       
Median weekly earnings: $1,047

25. Registered nurses
Median weekly earnings: $1,034

*Based on BLS data from 2011

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire